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Kifl Harith, Kufr alDik, Qira, Wed 16.11.11, Morning

Observers: Tova H., Bruria R. (reporting)
Nov-16-2011
| Morning

 

Translation:  Suzanne O.

 

It was a rainy day (a great thing for the Palestinians because their wells fill up), the roads were deserted and many of the shops were closed.

 

The shop owner we know at Kifl Haris was not there.

 

At Qira we found an open shop and talked to the owner.  There have been no irregular incidents in the village during the olive picking but she knows that in Zeita Jamma'n settlers brought sheep into the olive grove.  When we asked what damage had been caused she said that year on year the yield of oil the farmer gets from his trees goes down because of the damage that the sheep cause.  In one of the 'visits' the settlers paid to the grove they threw stones and damaged a tractor.  In this case, she said, other settlers came and threw out the attackers, we are not sure they were settlers, left wingers or guards in civilian clothes.

 

Theft of crops:  one of the farmers left sacks of olives on the road and they were all stolen, apparently by settlers.

 

At the club in Kafr ad Dik we energetically continued the bead stringing led by Tova, they produce beautiful necklaces and are preparing to show them at the bazaar which will take place a Salfit in two weeks time, if they have enough we will offer them for sale at the Cinematek conference. 

  • Kifl Harith

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    • Kifl Harith

      This is a Palestinian located north-west of the settler-colony town of Ariel, 18 kilometers south of the city of Nablus. It numbers 3, 206 inhabitants, as of 2007. 42% of the village lands lie in Area B, and 58% in Area C. In 1978, some hundreds of dunams of the village’s farmland was sequestered in order to found the settler-colony of Ariel – in total 5,184 dunams from the Palestinian communities of Salfit, Iscaqa, Marda, and Kifl Harith. Dozens of square kilometers were also confiscated for paving road no. 5 as well as road 505 and their buffer zones, and the Israeli electricity company’s power station. Over the years the village has suffered harassment by sometimes-armed settler-colonists, even casualties. In 1968 the army’s rabbinate ruled the maqam site Nabi Yanoun (sanctified grave of the Prophet Yanoun) is in fact the tomb of Joshua, Son of Nun. Another structure in the village, named Nabi Tul Kifl by the Palestinians, has been identified by the Israeli authorities as to the tomb of Caleb, Son of Yefuneh. These sites are located in the heart of the village, near the mosque, and at times of Jewish religious festivities and pilgrimages, the center of the village is illuminated by projectors and thousands of Jews arrive, protected by hundreds of Israeli soldiers. During such a period, a night curfew is imposed on the village and the villagers are forced to stay shut inside their homes.

  • Kufr a-Dik

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    • Kufr a-Dik This is a Palestinian village in the Salfit district of the West Bank, located 8 kilometers east of the Green Line. The village population numbers 4,494 (as of 2007). 14.5% of the village were included in Area B (supposedly under Palestinian civil control) and 86% categorized as Area C – meaning both civil and military Israeli control, which severely affects the state of the village and its inhabitants. Over the years Israel has robbed 1,448 dunams from the village’s farmlands for the sake of building the settler-colonies of Penuel, Alei Zahav, Yoezer, Har Alei Zahav, and the industrial zone next to Penuel. Lands were also sequestered for the paving of Road 446 whose length stretches over 4 kilometers and includes a buffer zone 75-meters wide on both its sides. Following the paving of the road, the village has suffered not only landgrab but home demolitions and the destruction of water wells as well. Rates of unemployment in both the private and the public sectors reach 60%. In the years 2010-2013 creative activity was held by members of MachsomWatch and women of the village. For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/salfit/pdfs/vprofile/Kafr%20ad%20Dik_tp_en.pdf
  • Qira

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    • Qira

      This village is located in the Salfit district of the northern West Bank, 19 kilometers south-west of Nablus. The village population numbered 1,387 as of 2016. 97.6% of the village lands are categorized as Area B, whereas the 2.3% remaining are in Area C. The Separation Fence erected around the settler-colony city of Ariel separates Qira from its local town Salfit, and necessitates a detour of about 20 kilometers.

      In 2010-2015, the women’s center in the village held meetings and workshops shared by the village women and children with members of MachsomWatch.

      For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/salfit/pdfs/vprofile/Qira_vp_en.pdf

       

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